Computer Science Canada Random integer help |
Author: | KONjbnj [ Tue May 03, 2005 7:44 am ] |
Post subject: | Random integer help |
How do you get a random integer number, but it's only the even numbers? I so far have: var num : int randomize randint (num, 1, 50) put num But I don't know what to do next. Also, for one of the questions, I'm supposed to scramble a word and let the user guess what the word is. I'm really confused at how to approach this. [i]Edit:[/i]Nevermind, I figured out the even number thing. I used: [quote] var num : int var even : int := 1 randomize loop randint (num, 1, 50) even := num mod 2 if even = 0 then put num end if exit when even = 0 end loop[/quote] |
Author: | jamonathin [ Tue May 03, 2005 8:20 am ] | ||
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This is all I can think of at the moment, something else may come to me, or someone else, but this method works.
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Author: | Cervantes [ Tue May 03, 2005 9:47 am ] |
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Take a rand.int from the lower bounds you want divided by 2 to the upper bounds, divided by 2. Then multiply result by 2. |
Author: | KONjbnj [ Wed May 04, 2005 8:00 am ] |
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Thanks, I already got the random even integer number. All I need help in is to scramble a word. Whenever I try to do it, sometimes the letters overlap with it eachother. How do I fix this? |
Author: | jamonathin [ Wed May 04, 2005 8:24 am ] |
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Post your code so we can see what you're doing wrong. Its better for you if we correct what you have then if we just tell you the answer. |
Author: | KONjbnj [ Wed May 04, 2005 8:42 am ] |
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I tried to do this so that the order of the letters won't be the same each time. [code]var t, u, r, i, n, g: int put "Unscramble this word!" randint (t, 2,6) randint (u, 2,6) randint (r, 2,6) randint (i, 2,6) randint (n, 2,6) randint (g, 2,6) locate (2,t) put "T" locate (2,u) put "U" locate (2,r) put "R" locate (2,i) put "I" locate (2,n) put "N" locate (2,g) put "G" [/code] But then the letters overlap each other. |
Author: | jamonathin [ Thu May 05, 2005 8:36 am ] | ||
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First of all, Turing has 6 letters in it, so even if you did it right, one letter would still overlap. Secondly, you're never checking if another letter has taken that spot. You just randomly choose a spot, and hope the program knows what you're thinking. Try this out.
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